Boston Herald

Markey, union push for better student ’net access

- By Lisa kashinsky

There’s no school this fall without the internet, but as remote learning gets underway in districts across Massachuse­tts and kicks off in Boston on Monday, not every student has access to a network.

“Right now we’re trying to connect students with 60- or 90-day free trials with Wi-Fi access. But what happens after those free trials end?”

Boston Teachers Union president Jessica Tang said on Friday.

Even among students who do have access to the internet, some have such poor connection­s that they’re “dropping in and out,” she added. “Obviously that’s a major disruption to remote learning.”

U.S. Sen. Edward Markey is calling for $4 billion in the next round of coronaviru­s relief funding to change that.

“The internet is like oxygen for young people and their education,” Markey said Friday, appearing with Tang outside the Boston Teachers Union Pilot School in Jamaica Plain. “If the internet is not made available to them, if they don’t have the devices, then they’re going to be left behind.”

Markey has been pushing for federal funding to ensure all students in kindergart­en through grade 12 have access to the internet at home as the coronaviru­s pandemic keeps learning largely online.

Beyond the $4 billion he says would be funded through general appropriat­ions — on taxpayers’ dime — Markey also wants to tap into $1.6 billion in Federal Communicat­ions Commission E-Rate funding to help supply students with Wi-Fi hotspots and other internet-access devices.

“Children should not have to scramble to find Wi-Fi, to find devices in order for them to learn,” Markey said, blaming President Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., for stonewalli­ng the funding.

Some 16 million children nationwide lack internet at home, predominan­tly poorer students, immigrants and people of color, Markey said.

More federal funding for internet access could benefit potentiall­y thousands of Boston students who don’t have hotspots, lack laptops or whose computers are broken and need to be replaced, Tang said.

 ?? MATT STonE / HErALd STAFF ?? MAKING THEIR CASE: Sen. Ed Markey and Boston Teachers Union President Jessica Tang speak Friday at the union’s pilot school in Jamaica Plain.
MATT STonE / HErALd STAFF MAKING THEIR CASE: Sen. Ed Markey and Boston Teachers Union President Jessica Tang speak Friday at the union’s pilot school in Jamaica Plain.

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